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The Graphic

Our Bookshelt: HARRY REVEL

... will depend on public favour. This being so, we have no fear that the promise will remain unfulfilled. typhoon Mr. Joseph Conrad's reputation as a story-teller of distinctive originality and power will ce tainly not be lessened by his new volume (William ...

Published: Saturday 09 May 1903
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 2595 | Page: 26 | Tags: Review 

THE THEATRES: MADAME DUSE AT THE WALDORF

... at the Royalty Theatre, of a comedy entitled The Arw Feliiiy by Miss Laurence Alma-Tadema, followed by One Day More, by Joseph Conrad, a dramatisation of the author's story To-morrow. PRINCESS ARISUGAWA PRINCE ARISUGAWA Now on a Visit to this Country. ...

Published: Saturday 01 July 1905
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 739 | Page: 12 | Tags: Review 

SOME NEW BOOKS OF THE MOMENT: THE EPIC OF JAN SMUTS

... his back upon it, though in his heart he had he-rd the call, which later comes again. The Shadow-Line: A Confession. By Joseph Conrad. (Dent.) 5s. The purpose of this book is expressed in the query on the outside cover Why did the captain and the silent ...

Published: Saturday 24 March 1917
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1484 | Page: 28 | Tags: Review 

The LEAVES OF YESTERDAY: A Book Page for Tomorrow

... as to quantity, for of fiction there seems to have been a tremendous lot. One of the ||*3 year's novels may go on, Mr. Joseph Conrad's Arrow of Gold, if only because it is more Conradish than anything else he has done, k Apart from him, where are the ...

Published: Saturday 20 December 1919
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1288 | Page: 20 | Tags: Review 

The LEAVES OF YESTERDAY: A Book Page for Tomorrow

... !L T| I LEAVESofYESTERDAY IA A ^boDkJPaqe for Tomorrow A modern Saga of the colourful seas of Malaya as Joseph Conrad tells it in his masterly new novel Where the Reader will find that it is The large silence of the horizon into which we are looking/' ...

Published: Saturday 10 July 1920
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1250 | Page: 24 | Tags: Review 

Book on the Way

... in a personal way? Mr. Joseph Conrad has been visiting America and Mr. George Haven Putnam is in London. You know them both, of course, and, therefore, you perceive at once the significance of what has been said. Joseph Conrad His full name, if 1 can ...

Published: Saturday 09 June 1923
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1487 | Page: 28 | Tags: Review 

Unfinished Novels & Other Books

... unfinished novel by a great writer be completed, when given to the public, or left alone This question is suggested by Joseph Conrad's posthumous story of the Napoleonic times, Suspense. SHOULD a novel, left unfinished by a writer of the first order, ...

Published: Saturday 26 September 1925
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1674 | Page: 30 | Tags: Review 

MODERN LIFE IN BOOKS

... His wanderings are compact vdth the lift and stir of high romance but it is a pity that he should have twice to refer to Joseph Conrad, whom he met as the mate of a brigantine, as the gifted Pole. A jolt like that will shake some of the spangles off the ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1927
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1862 | Page: 32 | Tags: Review